In his budget address Tuesday, Gov. Andrew Cuomo proposed a referendum that would ask voters to approve a $2 billion bond act to put more technology in the state's schools.

The plan would have to be approved by the state Legislature, and then approved by voters in November.

The initiative, called Smart Schools, would send money to every district in the state. Some $783 million would go to New York City, but millions would also go to schools in Central New York.

The money would pay for projects from high-speed broadband access to classroom technology like interactive smart boards. Some of the money would also allow schools to construct extra classroom space they may need for new full-day prekindergarten slots.

Cuomo noted in his State of the State address earlier this month that students across New York have vastly different access to technology.

"There are some schools where they have sophisticated new computer systems in the first grade," he said. "There are some schools where the most sophisticated piece of electronics equipment is the metal detector that you walk through on the way to the classroom. And that is just wrong in the state of New York."

Here is how much each district in Central New York would receive, according to state school aid runs released by the governor's budget office this week.